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The Trials and Consolations of Migrant-Serving Faith-Based Organizations

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  27 August 2024

Donald Kerwin*
Affiliation:
Senior Research Associate, Keough School of Global Affairs, University of Notre Dame, USA
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Abstract

This article is a response to Christians in public and private life who favor policies, employ rhetoric, and view migrants in ways that contravene their faith traditions. Speaking primarily from the perspective of Christian migrant-serving, faith-based organizations in the United States, the author examines their challenges, sources of consolation, and understanding of migrants in light of their work and religious touchstones in an era of political polarization and unprecedented forced displacement. He outlines an inclusive path forward, rooted in a commitment to the common good, to solidarity with the displaced, and to a deeper understanding of the hopes, aspirations, and gifts of migrants.

Type
Research Article
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2024. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of Center for the Study of Law and Religion at Emory University

Introduction

How do Christian faith-based organizations understand migrants, refugees, and immigrants in light of their religious touchstones and work with these populations? How do Christians in public and private life reconcile their policy positions, deployment of rhetoric, and views of migrants when these are at odds with their faith traditions?

In what follows, drawing from over three decades of work in mostly Catholic institutions,Footnote 1 I explore five interrelated challenges facing Christian faith-based organizations in responding to the needs of world’s displaced persons:

  1. 1. Disunity in their faith communities over migrants as manifested in their use as political instruments, opposition to the work of faith-based organizations, its tepid defense by putative allies, and criticism of policy engagement and the particular positions of faith communities.

  2. 2. Exclusionary ideologies, particularly forms of nationalism, nativism, and the misuse of concepts such as sovereignty and the rule of law.

  3. 3. Politically symbolic, antimigrant proposals, such as the proposed 2,000-mile US-Mexico border wall and fully sealed borders.

  4. 4. Bad laws and bad-faith compliance with sound laws.

  5. 5. Maintaining religious identity in the context of diverse partnerships and funding streams in an increasingly secular field.

I also offer reflections on Christian faith-based organizations’ sources of consolation, understood in the Ignatian sense as an interior movement to God’s love and presence. Consolation is an overarching, often implicit goal of faith communities in their ministries to migrants. In particular, faith-based organizations find consolation in

  • the providential sense that they are participating in a larger plan not of their own making;

  • the abiding gratitude, generosity, and faithfulness of many migrants despite their suffering and hardship;

  • the hopefulness that radiates from acts of hospitality, justice, and the lives of many migrants;

  • the ability to connect with persons in need across differences in status, origin, culture, religion, and ethnicity;

  • the response by faith communities to the whole person (in all their dimensions) and their interconnected work of charity and justice; and

  • the privilege of pursuing a vocation that serves the least and seeks to change the hearts and minds of the comfortable and complacent.

The life-changing potential in encountering persons in need, rooted in a recognition of our common humanity, sustains faith-based organizations in this work, despite tragedy, setbacks, and disappointments.

Faith-Based Organizations and Migration

Migration plays an integral role in “the founding narratives” and normative values of many of the world’s religions,Footnote 2 which share a bedrock belief in the “moral duty to care for the stranger.”Footnote 3 Faith communities, in turn, accompany migrants at every stage of the migration experience and in virtually every place where displaced persons live. They seek to alleviate the conditions that uproot human beings, protect migrants in transit, and promote their integration and well-being wherever they settle.

Faith communities notably serve as a safe harbor in times of crisis and peril, and trusted sources of services and information.Footnote 4 At their best, they “make a profound and durable impact by virtue of their geographic, moral, and political reach and influence” and serve as a bridge between migrants and public/private actors in the migration process.Footnote 5 Their ties to migrant populations and host communities position them to advocate for migrants, including on the use of public services.Footnote 6 Some act as mediating institutions that prepare, fortify, and help immigrants to engage their new communities from a position of strength and belonging.

In their multifaceted work with migrants, faith-based organizations face major challenges, or trials, and also draw on powerful sources of consolation. I use the term migrants to signify both persons in transit and, in the colloquial sense of the word, persons from different countries living outside their country of origin. I use the term immigrants to encompass settled noncitizens with a range of legal statuses, including asylum-seekers, permanent and temporary residents, and persons without immigration status.

I also distinguish between congregations (faith communities that gather to worship and serve) and faith-based organizations that offer humanitarian assistance and longer-term development services, such as education, health, legal, and resettlement programs.Footnote 7 I use the term faith-based organizations to refer to formal organizations, programs, and ministries, and to the people who comprise, sustain, and benefit from them. Moreover, I view faith-based organizations’ connectedness to migrants as a measure of their success and legitimacy. Faith-based organizations hold themselves accountable to migrants in different ways—by living and working beside them (accompaniment), by constituting themselves with leaders, staff, and volunteers from migrant communities, by making their institutions financially and culturally accessible, and by developing formal accountability systems related to decision-making. Thus, I use the descriptor migrant-serving not to imply distance, but to connote an intimate and often organic relationship to migrant communities.

Trials

Faith communities seek to practice discipleship through their work. Yet they operate in public arenas teeming with ideologies, laws, and policies at odds with their beliefs, goals, and experiences. Many political and media figures use harsh rhetoric to vilify and marginalize migrants, often for political purposes.

Faith-based organizations take pains to understand the values, experiences, and legitimate concerns that may underlie the views of their co-religionists, particularly public figures.Footnote 8 They hope to reach a deeper understanding based on shared religious touchstones and an honest assessment of the situations, aspirations, and contributions of migrants. However, they often confront a style of engagement more intent on mischaracterizing their work and those they serve. In the United States, some public officials advocate stripping federal tax-exempt status or the ability to do business in particular states from faith-based organizations for their lawful work with migrants.Footnote 9 Others champion strategies that imperil persons in flight, deny them access to protection, and marginalize them in local communities.

Faith-based organizations tend to be laser focused on the needs of those they know and serve, local partners, and the distinct challenges related to welcoming newcomers in their faith and geographic communities.Footnote 10 Yet they also seek to understand and address the causes of displacement, flight, and exclusion. In biblical terms, they try to rescue babies floating down the river and to stem the conditions upriver that cast so many adrift. The overarching trials and some of the day-to-day operational challenges of faith-based organizations speak to the manifold traumas and needs of migrants.

Faith Communities and the Problem of Disunity

Faith communities view their unity as a source of strength and consolation. However, although Christianity seeks communion between the faithful through the person and teaching of Jesus Christ, it suffers from sharp divisions on social issues, including refugee protection and immigration. Indeed, interfaith and interreligious solidarity in responding to displacement and crisesFootnote 11 and in advocating for migrantsFootnote 12 can be stronger than intra-faith unity on what many believers perceive to be a political option, not a moral imperative.Footnote 13 For example, between December 2012 and December 2013, 1,700 religious leaders, members of faith communities, and faith-based organizations endorsed the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees’ (UNHCR’s) statement “Welcoming the Stranger: Affirmations for Faith Leaders,”Footnote 14 which captures the source of this unity. It avers: “The call to ‘welcome the stranger,’ through protection and hospitality, and to honor the stranger or those of other faiths with respect and equality, is deeply rooted in all major religions.”Footnote 15

However, Christians form their views and opinions from diverse sources and imperfect knowledge. Religious conviction can help to shape policy positions but can also be lost in partisan, political identities.Footnote 16 It offends faith-based organizations when their most ardent ideological and policy foes are co-religionists, many of whom publicly identify and justify their positions by reference to their faith. In the circumstances, faith-based organizations need to decide how to address persons who, they believe, at best misunderstand and at worse use religion to pursue agendas at odds with their shared faith traditions.

Since 2013, the Center for Migration Studies of New York has coordinated the Catholic Immigrant Integration Initiative, a program that seeks to strengthen the individual and collective work of diverse Catholic institutions, programs and ministries with immigrants and their families. A recurrent theme in the initiative’s gatherings has been the bewilderment of faith-based organizations and immigrants at co-religionists who champion anti-migrant policies or fail to defend them in the face of sustained public attacks. This is nothing new in the nation’s history. Christian communities have a long, tawdry history of failing to protect their brothers and sisters in faith. Legislation passed by the Virginia General Assembly in September 1667, for example, is aptly titled “An act declaring that baptisme of slaves doth not exempt them from bondage.” The words of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. capture the frustration of faith-based organizations and immigrant communities at many of their co-religionists. “We will have to repent in this generation not merely for the hateful words and actions of bad people but for the appalling silence of the good people.”Footnote 17

Using Migrants as a Means to the End

Politicians who foreground their faith regularly exploit migrants by using them as political tools. In 2022, for example, three Catholic governors—Ron DeSantis of Florida, Greg Abbott of Texas, and Doug Ducey of Arizona began to transport to New York City, Chicago, Washington DC, Philadelphia, Los Angeles, Denver, and elsewhere a population that had swelled to hundreds of thousands of migrants by mid-2024. Governor Jared Polis of Colorado initiated a similar busing policy in late December of 2022.Footnote 18 The City of El Paso transported 14,000 migrants to New York City and Chicago between August 23 and late October 2022.Footnote 19 Between late September 2023 and early December 2023, the state of Texas and the City of El Paso bused 1,300 migrants to New York, Chicago, and Denver.Footnote 20

Faith communities mobilized in support of the bused migrants and strongly criticized the transport programs. It did not escape the notice of the interfaith coalition assisting the migrants that the first group bused to Washington, DC, arrived on Holy Thursday, the day before Passover, and during Ramadan.Footnote 21 Texas and Arizona insisted that the migrants were voluntarily in these programs, but some did not know where else they could go or even where they were headed. Many sought to join loved ones and find work, but elsewhere in the United States.

The buses deposited many of the migrants at Washington, DC’s Union Station in the dead of night, including families with young children. Three buses left migrants on a freezing Christmas Eve night near the vice president’s residence.Footnote 22 To faith communities, these unhoused migrants evoked the Holy Family, not an invasion or existential threat to their nation.

The chartered flights by the State of Florida to Martha’s Vineyard in mid-September of 2022 and its two flights to Sacramento, California, in early June 2023 particularly troubled faith-based organizations. Florida’s first chartered plane traveled to San Antonio in order to locate migrants to send to Martha’s Vineyard. The migrants boarded in response to promises of nonexistent jobs, housing, and benefits in Boston.Footnote 23 Many had immigration court dates the same week in other jurisdictions.

Faith-based organizations recognized that in pressuring desperate people to travel under false pretenses and using them for its own purposes, Florida had adopted the tactics of human traffickers. Others saw this strategy as analogous to the “reverse freedom rides” of the 1960s, when white supremacists offered Black residents in the southern United States one-way tickets to northern and western cities, with false promises of housing, jobs, and a warm reception.Footnote 24 In weaponizing migrants to sow discord in more welcoming US states and localities, the governors also borrowed the strategy—employed often (but not exclusively) by autocratic regimes against democratic states—to achieve their geopolitical aims.Footnote 25

Doubling down on its widely criticized tactics, Florida subsequently used a private contractor to recruit approximately thirty-six out-of-state migrants (mostly Venezuelans and Colombians) near a shelter in El Paso, Texas, with empty promises of employment in California. The contractor flew the migrants to Sacramento and left them without jobs, prospects, or concern for their removal hearings (scheduled elsewhere), depositing some at the steps of the Catholic Diocese of Sacramento.Footnote 26 Florida also sent recruiters to locate migrants at Sacred Heart Church in El Paso. Bishop Mark Seitz of the Diocese of El Paso characterized this initiative as an “effort to make a political point” and “reprehensible.”Footnote 27

Faith communities commit their time and treasure to remedying conditions that will have forcibly displaced or rendered stateless a projected 131 million persons by 2024Footnote 28 and by trying to secure more viable, permanent homes for the displaced. Forced migrants serve as a kind of canary in a coal mine for the world’s myriad crises. In 2023, for example,72 percent of the migrants “encountered” nationwide by US border officials came from Mexico, Venezuela, Guatemala, Honduras, Colombia, Cuba, Ecuador, Nicaragua, and Haiti.Footnote 29 These states and their migrant-sending communities are beset in varying degrees by organized crime, repression, environmental crisis, poverty, economic free-fall, political dysfunction, and the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic. Moreover, migrants typically move for a mix of reasons, and violence can be a pervasive threat even for “economic migrants.”Footnote 30

Republican politicians once championed the cause of refugees and asylum-seekers from politically repressive countries, such as Venezuela, Nicaragua, and Cuba. Yet governors Abbott and DeSantis tried instead to dramatize what they mischaracterized as the federal government’s open border policy, a much-repeated talking point that worked at cross-purposes with federal border control efforts.

The governors also sought to expose the hypocrisy of Northern jurisdictions, which they believed would reject the transported migrants.Footnote 31 Yet the targeted communities instead made significant efforts to assist them. As of December 2023, New York City had 67,200 migrants in its care of the total 150,000 who had passed through the city’s emergency shelter system since the onset of the busing programs, and its per diem cost per migrant household neared $400.Footnote 32 As the 2023–2024 school year began, it enrolled 21,000 new students (mostly migrants), who were living in temporary housing.Footnote 33 By March 2024, it had opened seventeen humanitarian emergency response and relief centers and housed asylum-seekers in 218 emergency shelters.Footnote 34

Migrant expenses strained other receiving jurisdictions as well.Footnote 35 By January 2024, Chicago had received nearly 35,000 bused and flown migrants from Texas and other states, and Illinois governor J. B. Pritzer implored Abbott not to send more, stating that their health and survival would be at risk in the frigid weather.Footnote 36 Yet unscheduled buses continued to deposit migrants at night in irregular suburban locations in sub-zero temperatures.

These receiving communities are not hypocritical. Migrants have found homes in them for generations. In effect, the border reached them long ago. Recent migrants have continued to make their way to these and other communities, typically to join family and to work at a time of well-documented US labor needs.Footnote 37 Federal programs eased the reception of some migrants. Highlighting the importance of legal status, work, and community ties to immigrant integration, the state of Massachusetts reported virtually no use of its shelters by persons admitted under a Biden-era program that offers humanitarian parole to Cubans, Haitians, Nicaraguans, and Venezuelans, who have immediate relatives in the United States and financial sponsorship by US residents.Footnote 38

What particularly offended faith-based organizations about the busing programs was the deliberately poor and often nonexistent coordination with receiving communities,Footnote 39 and the absence of any concern for the welfare of the migrants or their new communities. Whatever the migrants’ trajectories, the governors used human beings—survivors of journeys that have killed record numbers—as political props and as a tool to try to divide and create disarray in other US communities. The welfare of the migrants and the receiving communities has never been the point.

On May 10, 2023, Governor DeSantis signed into law legislation that allocated $12 million to the state’s migrant “transport program,” invalidated drivers’ licenses from other states of persons lacking immigration status, required hospitals to determine the immigration status of patients, and made it a felony to transport undocumented immigrants, including family members, into the state.Footnote 40

Employers feared the law would lead to the loss of immigrant construction, agricultural, and tourism industry workers in a state already experiencing labor shortages.Footnote 41 In a meeting with faith leaders and community groups, legislative champions of the bill minimized its likely impact, characterizing it as “political” and intended mostly to “scare” people.Footnote 42Archbishop Thomas G. Wenski of Miami argued that the legislation criminalized “empathy” and gratuitously made the lives of select immigrants more difficult.Footnote 43 Governor DeSantis also made the US-Mexico border a centerpiece of his presidential campaign, likening asylum-seekers and other migrants to an invading army, home burglars, a threat to US sovereignty, and “criminal aliens.”Footnote 44

Both DeSantis and Abbott raised the specter of killing border crossers, with DeSantis threatening to leave suspected drug smugglers at the border “stone-cold dead,”Footnote 45 and Abbott complaining that the “only thing we’re not doing is we’re not shooting people who come across the border, because of course, the Biden administration would charge us with murder.”Footnote 46

Opposition to the Work of Faith Communities with Migrants and Its Tepid Defense by Co-religionists

Public officials also regularly criticize faith-based organizations for their work with migrants and immigrants. On April 21, 2022, Congresswomen Marjorie Taylor Greene, a self-described “cradle” Catholic and Christian nationalist, claimed that Catholic Charities’ work with immigrant families proved “Satan’s controlling the church.”Footnote 47 She accused the church of “destroying our laws,” “perverting” the US Constitution, and “forcing America to become something that we are not supposed to be.”Footnote 48

Publicity-seeking politicians present an occupational hazard, but the tepid defense of this ministry by putative allies and co-religionists reveals a deeper problem. The Catholic League for Religious and Civil Rights, an institution devoted to responding to “slanderous assaults” against the Catholic Church and the defense of its teaching, demanded that Greene immediately apologize to Catholics. However, it also spoke of the abundance of “opportunities” to criticize the Catholic Church’s work with “illegal aliens.”Footnote 49

Why do defenders of the faith view criticism of this ministry as an opportunity? What opportunities does it present? In the Christian tradition, human beings cannot be “illegal” any more than brothers and sisters or the children of a loving God can be. Moreover, to characterize human beings as “illegal” is to portray their Creator as a lawbreaker. Yet prominent Christians and Catholic media persist in slandering migrants as “illegal aliens,” “illegal alien children,” “invaders,” and worse.Footnote 50 Such terms are message-tested to inflame public sentiment against migrants, typically in service to political ends. Biblical scholar Gregory Cuellar argues by associating migrants with “criminal aliens,” “gang member[s],” and “Mexican rapist[s],” former president Trump sought to “desacralize” migrants—the children of God—and “sacralize “border security,” while sanctifying his vision of the nation, its true members (the “people”) and himself (their leader).Footnote 51

Christianity seeks to “gather into one the dispersed children of God” (John 11:52, NABRE). It does not restrict love of “neighbor” to those in a “closely knit community of a single country or people,” but extends it to “[a]nyone who needs me, and whom I can help.”Footnote 52 It sees the faithful as part of the body of Christ, which reflects its hope “to bring wholeness and unity to a fragmented and divided human family,” to bind “all people together through love,” and to call all to “re-member especially those who have been dis-membered from the body.”Footnote 53

While politicians consistently use divisive rhetoric to “other” migrants and refugees, Christianity seeks to move “from a narrative of otherness to a vision of one-ness.”Footnote 54 Under its core teaching, unity does not turn on legal distinctions, but models the triune God and Christ’s identification with the dispossessed and disinherited. Migrants are not “alien” to this tradition. They are angels in disguise (Hebrews 13:2), the self-sacrificing daughter-in-law in the messianic line (Ruth 1–4), and the Good Samaritan, a foreigner who models compassion and mercy (Luke 10: 25–37). They evoke the Holy Family in its dangerous journey to Bethlehem to secure documentation (Luke 2: 1–7), and its flight to Egypt from King Herod (Matthew 2: 13–15).Footnote 55 Jesus charged his followers to “make disciples of all nations” (Matthew 28: 19–20, NABRE), and to spread God’s word “to the ends of the earth” (Acts 1:8, NABR).

Christians see in the “least” a means of salvation and the way “to encounter the face of Jesus Christ.”Footnote 56 At a 2022 event, Fessahaye Mebrahtu, director of Black Catholic and ethnic ministries for the Archdiocese of Milwaukee, described himself as an African “immigrant, in a lifelong process of integration.”Footnote 57 He spoke movingly of Eritrean migrants he knew who had died at sea trying to reach a better life, and of their family members. “On the last judgment,” he said, “Jesus will tell us, ‘I am the brother or sister you neglected.’ Therefore, we cannot abdicate our responsibilities as our brothers/sisters’ keepers, especially those on the margins.” Christians believe they will be judged by the God of the least, the God crucified as a criminal,Footnote 58 the God of persons who died in transit, the God of the “nobodies” of the world.Footnote 59

In a telling irony, Christian lawmakers who applaud Texas, Florida, and Arizona for transporting asylum-seekers to other jurisdictions, seek to deny Catholic Charities agencies federal funding and accuse them of “aiding and abetting” illegal migration by meeting the humanitarian needs of migrants.Footnote 60 To that end, the Secure Border Act of 2023 would have prohibited the processing of migrants arriving between ports-of-entry (ensuring that these border crossers could not legally enter), stripped funding from nongovernmental organizations that “facilitate or encourage unlawful activity,” and barred funding to organizations that offer lodging and legal services to “inadmissible” persons.Footnote 61 Yet Catholic Charities agencies do not violate the law. In fact, border officers transport migrants to these agencies because they offer humanitarian services.

Faith communities would far prefer that potential migrants could flourish in their home communities, furthering what Saint John Paul II called “the right not to emigrate” and Pope Francis terms the freedom “to choose whether to migrate or to stay.”Footnote 62 Many of the world’s poorest citizens lack these twin rights. Climate change, for example, “is equally likely to increase migration as it is to prevent it” and “poorer households are likely to be ‘trapped’ in circumstances where they are at once more vulnerable … and less able to move.”Footnote 63

Faith-based organizations try to make the right to stay a reality. However, they also serve human beings—many of them forcibly displaced—in their time of need. In secular terms, they exercise their “freedom of thought, conscience, and religion” through their work in “charitable and humanitarian institutions.”Footnote 64 They believe that temporary residents in the United States, asylum seekers, and undocumented persons need more services, not fewer, and they oppose policies that impede their work with immigrants. They practice discipleship in the ways Christ taught (Matthew 25:31–46).

In a survey by the Center for Migration Studies of New York spanning the Trump presidency, high rates of Catholic immigrant-serving institutions—such as charities, hospitals, schools, universities, refugee resettlement programs, legal offices, food banks, and youth ministries—reported that the administration’s interior enforcement strategies very negatively or somewhat negatively affected their work with immigrants.Footnote 65 Respondents identified fear of deportation as a primary impediment to immigrants accessing their programs and ministries. One put it bluntly: “Fear deters clients from seeking any services.”Footnote 66 Another explained that enforcement “[c]reates fear, [an] environment of misinformation, trauma for families who endured/endure extensive separation.”Footnote 67 In 2018, Archbishop Wenski decried policies that sought to make America great by making it “mean.”Footnote 68

Criticism of Faith-Based Organizations’ Public Policy Engagement and Positions

Christian intellectuals and media figures reliably attack the policy work of mainstream Catholic institutions. They dissent from Catholic teaching with lockstep messaging, arguing that migration has nothing to do with the faith, dismissing it as a peripheral issue on which they can disagree in good faith, and characterizing faith leaders as self-interested.Footnote 69 In 2017, Stephen Bannon, chief White House strategist in the Trump administration, criticized the US bishops’ opposition to terminating the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program, known as DACA, which offered temporary status and work authorization to undocumented persons brought to the United States as children. Bannon attributed the bishop’s “terrible” positions on “illegal aliens” to their economic interests in “unlimited illegal immigration,” dismissing them as “just another guy with an opinion.”Footnote 70

Pope Francis has consistently rejected the claim that the “situation of migrants” is a lesser” concern and has affirmed that for Christians: “the only proper attitude is to stand in the shoes of those brothers and sisters of ours who risk their lives to offer a future to their children. Can we not realize that this is exactly what Jesus demands of us, when he tells us that in welcoming the stranger we welcome him?”Footnote 71 He has also decried the hypocrisy of Christians who “defend Christianity in the West on the one hand but on the other are averse to refugees and other religions.”Footnote 72 He said: “The sickness, one may also say the sin that Jesus condemns the most is hypocrisy. A Christian cannot be a Christian unless they live like a Christian. A Christian cannot be a Christian without practicing The Beatitudes. A Christian cannot be a Christian if they do not do as Jesus asks of them in Matthew chapter 25.”Footnote 73

The political scientist Mark Amstutz offers a sweeping critique of select teaching documents and the policy work of Christian churches on immigration. While conceding that Christian denominations “are certainly entitled to advance” their policy concerns, he argues they have neglected “moral education” on immigration in favor of “policy advocacy,” an area in which they possess “comparatively limited competence” and provide little “value.”Footnote 74

These claims are difficult to sustain. Over the past 130 years, for example, the Catholic Church has produced a steady stream of teaching documents on migrants and refugees, and many would argue that its moral education on migration encompasses its entire history. However, it struggles to promote meaningful engagement with its teaching by the faithful, particularly those in public life. Moreover, faith-based organizations enjoy immense public policy expertise on migration, rooted in their institutional histories, work with affected communities, and religious touchstones. To take Catholic teaching to heart, Catholic institutions must be committed to integral development; that is, the good of “each” person and the “whole” person, in all their dimensions and at every stage of their life journeys.Footnote 75 This commitment requires a level of engagement and expertise that goes well beyond their policy work but informs it.

Catholic institutions serve persons in migrant sending communities throughout the world and run large networks of shelters and welcoming centers for migrants in transit. In the United States, they live, work, accompany, and offer spiritual and material support to immigrants and their children through 16,429 parishes, 522 hospitals, 4,750 elementary schools, 220 colleges and universities, the nation’s largest US refugee resettlement and charitable legal immigration networks, and many other ministries and programs.Footnote 76

Amstutz criticizes the Catholic Church for viewing the world “through the lens of utopian idealism.”Footnote 77 Yet its work with forced migrants, the undocumented, and the imprisoned expose it to the dystopian conditions that uproot human beings and that migrants endure in their long, often unsuccessful struggles to reach safety and find a permanent home.

Amstutz also charges the Catholic Church with insufficient appreciation of the role of states in “advancing human rights and fostering economic prosperity.”Footnote 78 In fact, the Catholic Church takes states seriously by holding them to high standards: Catholic teaching vests in states responsibility for safeguarding rights, promoting the common good, and creating the conditions that allow persons to flourish in their home communities. This teaching undergirds its policy work with states. Moreover, many policy makers and public agencies value the Catholic Church’s normative positions, technical expertise, and intimate knowledge of the lived experience of migrants and host communities. On an international level, the Holy See frequently convenes states to dialogue on issues, such as migration, that they cannot successfully address on their own.

Amstutz criticizes “denominational statements and studies” that offer “insufficient analysis of existing immigration conditions and policies.”Footnote 79 When it comes to “the subject of unauthorized aliens,” however, his own focus is insufficiently narrow, not “whether such persons are entitled to equal and fair treatment,” but how to respond to their “unlawful presence in a foreign state.”Footnote 80 Christian ethicists such as Kristin Heyer caution against restricting migration analysis to the individual acts of migrants, and making them “the primary site for enforcement and responsibility.”Footnote 81 Heyer argues for “more receptive responses” that “prioritize hospitality over structural justice,” lift up the “social dimensions of justice,” recognize “sinful complicity,” and seek broader accountability.Footnote 82 Her work suggests that an analysis of just (only) immigration cannot be just because it fails to contextualize migration and ignores its causes, the contributions of migrants, and the wellbeing of migrants, their families, and their circles of association.

Christian faith-based organizations advocated for language in the Global Compact on Migration on the need to mitigate the structural factors driving migration, to expand legal migration pathways, and to facilitate safe return and reintegration.Footnote 83 Their programs and advocacy engage the causes and triggers of forced migration and the “deeper roots of displacement, such as food security, global inequality, and governance,” not just their “symptoms” (uprooted persons).Footnote 84

Faith-based organizations recognize, as Saskia Sassen writes, that while globalization (the cross-border flow of goods, services, capital, and information) “denationalizes national economies,” it has renationalized migration control in its many forms.Footnote 85 It pains them to see politicians misdirect furor over the effects of globalization, to those displaced by this phenomenon, or to characterize the victims of violence as criminals or possible terrorists.

Faith-based organizations recognize the “unintended bridges” to migration, created by the interventions, policies, and conspicuous consumption of developed states.Footnote 86 They insist on state accountability for conflict, “economic instability,” climate change,Footnote 87 and gun violence.Footnote 88 They criticize the hypocrisy, for example, of developed nations that have been poor stewards of the environment, and now build walls—physical, paper, and policy—to deny access to protection to the persons displaced by climate change and other conditions.Footnote 89

They believe that policies to address the undocumented cannot exist in a vacuum but need to acknowledge the dependence on undocumented workers of US industries,Footnote 90 the US economy, and the broader society. They recognize the heroic work of undocumented, frontline workers during the COVID-19 pandemicFootnote 91 and their effective membership in US society. They support stronger and better-enforced labor laws so that unscrupulous employers cannot exploit the undocumented and drive down wages and working conditions for all workers. They support reform of the badly outdated legal immigration system, so that it meets the nation’s labor, family, and humanitarian needs. They understand that US visa backlogs exceed the life expectancy of many of the undocumented immigrants mired in them. They know that US law provides only 10,000 immigrant visas per year for so-called unskilled workers, but there are more than seven million undocumented workers in the US labor force. Faith-based organizations understand and deal with the disastrous aftereffects of deportation on “mixed-status” families, their mostly US citizen children, faith communities, and the broader society.Footnote 92 Most faith-based organizations do not believe removal would be a proportionate punishment for persons brought to the United States as children, or those who have developed strong family and community ties to the country over many years. In addition, most view legal counsel in removal proceedings as a rule of law imperative.Footnote 93

Amstutz refers to several “deportation-by-attrition” state laws as reasonable and “moderate.”Footnote 94 However, these laws sought to make life so unlivable for undocumented immigrants and their families that they would self-deport. What would it have meant for US families and society, and the rule of law if federal courts had not permanently blocked seven provisions of Alabama’s HB 56?Footnote 95 What about its prohibition, for example, on enforcement of contracts with undocumented immigrants, or on business transactions between the undocumented and the state or its political subdivisions, such as for payment of water, gas, and electricity?

The US Department of Justice wrote that these provisions “were designed to affect virtually every aspect of an unauthorized immigrant’s daily life, from employment to housing to transportation to entering into and enforcing contracts” and that they “threatened to impose significant burdens on federal and state agencies, diverting their resources away from dangerous criminal aliens and other high-priority criminal activity.”Footnote 96 Faith-based organizations do not have all the answers on complex policy issues, but they try to offer fully informed policy ideas that reflect their knowledge of immigrants, the well-being of local communities, and their religious convictions.

Exclusionary, Anti-person Ideologies

Although sometimes cast in religious terms, the interrelated ideologies used to justify exclusion and deny protection and membership to migrants stand in stark opposition to core Christian teaching.

Ethno-cultural Nationalism

Nationalism, defined as “rule in the name of a nationally defined ‘people,’” can theoretically promote inclusion, equality and solidarity.Footnote 97 However, it can also be deployed to concentrate power, wealth, and state resources in the hands of a self-selected group who see themselves as its true members and who believe others cannot fully belong because they lack the “people’s” defining characteristics, whether race, religion, ethnicity, culture, or ancestry. Like Christian populism, it favors a dominant group at the expense of the “least” who are of particular concern to Christianity.Footnote 98

Ethno-cultural nationalism offers a rationale to oppose the admission of migrants, to justify their removal, and to relegate them to a permanent second-class status. It has inspired violence on behalf of the nation’s core members, some hoping to accelerate a larger conflict, as revealed in the hateful manifestos and online rantings of mass murderers.Footnote 99 While ethno-cultural nationalists raise the specter of their own demographic and military conquest, they can also be quite explicit about their desire to conquer, segregate and control migrant and other disfavored groups,.Footnote 100 In recent history, numerous religious leaders have supported “ultra-nationalist” rhetoric and been complicit in encouraging violence against minority and immigrant populations.Footnote 101

Ethno-cultural nationalists view the “people” as a culturally and historically distinct group. At the extreme, this ideology can lead to partition, forcible expulsion, ethnic cleansing, and genocide. At a minimum, it contravenes the vision of the United States as a creedal nation, enunciated by many US presidents.Footnote 102 In his first inaugural address, for example, George W. Bush described the United States as the “story of flawed and fallible people, united across the generations by grand and enduring ideals.”Footnote 103 Taking exception to exclusionary ideologies, he said: “America has never been united by blood or birth or soil. We are bound by ideals that move us beyond our backgrounds, lift us above our interests and teach us what it means to be citizens.”Footnote 104

Christian Nationalism

Christian nationalists also equate nations with a particular people and culture.Footnote 105 They bemoan the potential or perceived loss of the nation’s Christian identity. They view the United States as a God-favored beacon of hope, a “city upon a hill,” in the words of Puritan John Winthrop,Footnote 106 who also cautioned that failure to live and act with charity would lead to the withdraw of God’s blessing. Christian nationalists minimize abuses (past and present) against indigenous persons, minorities, and immigrants. In a powerful critique of American exceptionalism and the slogan “’Take Back’ America for God,” the theologian Gregory Boyd argues that the United States never “remotely” resembled the Kingdom of God, but Europeans “discovered,” conquered, appropriated, and settled the nation in a typically violent and unjust way, all in the name of Christianity.Footnote 107 Boyd highlights the danger of Christian “allegiance” to the “kingdom of the world” and cautions that Christians risk losing their “birthright” and “central calling” when they equate political power with building Christ’s “new humanity,” which does not make “ethnic, nationalistic, gender, social, or economic distinctions.”Footnote 108

After decades of accusations that minorities gamed US society by portraying themselves as victims, many white Christians now view themselves as society’s true victims, a persecuted minority losing a “zero sum” game.Footnote 109 In the same vein, Trump has consistently portrayed himself as the victim of a vast (unsupported) election conspiracy and of his multiple criminal indictments.Footnote 110 More recently, he has posed as a suffering, messianic figure.Footnote 111 Far-right political parties in Europe similarly try to co-opt Christianity’s identification with the vulnerable and persecuted, by misidentifying themselves as victims and an imperiled group.Footnote 112 Nor, of course, is nationalism confined to persons with a particular political orientation. In Nicaragua, the leftist totalitarian regime of Daniel Ortega and the Sandinista National Liberation Front attacks the Catholic Church, political challengers, civil society organizations, and the press, while characterizing itself as “Christian, socialist, and … based on solidarity.”Footnote 113

Christian nationalists view non-Christian immigrants (however defined) as a threat, and some decry what they characterize as open society and globalist policies. The political scientist Samuel Huntington described the United States as a Christian nation, but of a particular kind, one defined by its mainstream Anglo-Protestant culture and Americanized form of Catholicism. The nation’s other core features, in Huntington’s telling, are its commitment to the American creed, individualism, the work ethic, the rule of law, and the English language.Footnote 114

Huntington viewed Mexican immigrants as a particular threat to US culture, despite their emblematic work ethic, strong (mostly Christian) faith, and commitment to family. He argued that US southwestern states could become a greater danger to US unity than, for example, Quebec posed to Canada. He warned that “[c]ontiguity, numbers, illegality, regional concentration, persistence, and historical presence” made the “assimilation of people of Mexican origin” an existential problem.Footnote 115 In fact, many US residents of Mexican origin live in the same area that their ancestors did before the United States annexed more than one-half of Mexican territory in the mid-nineteenth century.

Huntington’s views have not aged well. He associates Christianity—a religion that seeks communion and universal reconciliation— with an exclusive ideology. He mischaracterizes the intentions of Mexican Americans and poorly describes US border communities. His anticipated “demographic reconquista of areas Americans took from Mexico by force” has not occurred.Footnote 116 Even without a legalization program, the number of Mexican immigrants without US status decreased from 2010 to 2021, before rising slightly in 2022.Footnote 117

In 2006, Patrick Buchanan offered a variation of Huntington’s thesis in the provocatively titled State of Emergency: The Third World Invasion and the Conquest of America, in which he argued that nations, by definition, consist of a “people” with the same ancestry, culture, land, and history.Footnote 118 Nativists have made similar arguments to exclude and marginalize supposedly unassimilable immigrants of different religions, nationalities, races and ethnicities throughout US history,Footnote 119 including Irish Catholics like Buchanan. The accusers and targets differ over time, but the arguments remain the same.

Buchanan maintained that human beings would not risk their lives in war to defend abstract ideals.Footnote 120 Yet immigrant families produce large numbers of soldiers. In predominantly immigrant neighborhoods in the US southwest, it can be difficult to find a home without a photograph of a young soldier on display. Moreover, in a triumph of humanity, migrants continuously do risk their lives in search of freedom, opportunity, and security. Many believe passionately in these ideals, often because they have lived in repressive nations and those without economic opportunity. One can also easily find immigrants who love their new land and their country of birth, their heritage and the lives they have built in their new communities. This phenomenon evidences well-integrated, grateful human beings, not “divided loyalties.”

Former president Trump connected Christian nationalism to nativism’s preoccupation with danger coming from outside the country, by emphasizing “the need to return America to her Christian” roots so that it would not become “corrupted by other nations.”Footnote 121 Yet he parroted Nazi rhetoric in asserting that undocumented immigrants were “poisoning the blood of our country.”Footnote 122 Trump, DeSantis, and others also blamed immigrants, outsiders, and racial minorities for the introduction and spread of COVID-19.Footnote 123

Christian nationalism challenges the idea of a diverse, multi-ethnic nation that melds “many peoples into one.”Footnote 124As Huntington and Buchanan suggest, Christian nationalists would in fact exclude the many Christians who do not pass their ethnic and racial screens.Footnote 125 There is a dissonance in invoking the name of Christ—who embraced the disenfranchised and despised, and inaugurated a kingdom to grow from a tiny mustard seed to the largest of plants (Matthew 13: 31–32)—to exclude or relegate to second-class status persons based on their race, nationality, ethnicity, or religion, including fellow Christians.

Faith-based organizations instead serve as a bridge between the culturally distinct communities where they live, the diverse immigrants they serve, and residents whose families arrived in different eras. They view diversity as a gift and a source of strength, not a threat to the nation’s identity, but an integral aspect of it.

Politicians and media figures regularly stress difference, often doing so to disparage one community or another. Yet a credible vision of US national identity would need to encompass the different cultures within and between its states, sub-state areas, and neighborhoods. Tennessee and Texas, for example, do differ from each other and even more from New York and California. Miami, Florida, differs from Jackson, Mississippi; Laramie, Wyoming, differs from El Paso, Texas. The hyper-diverse borough of Queens in New York City contains nearly as many foreign-born residents as natives. For faith-based organizations, this diversity presents an opportunity for communities—rooted in a commitment to shared ideals and institutions—to model the gifts of multiculturalism.

Christian nationalism manifests itself on a national stage or within families, and occasionally in both. David Glosser, the uncle of Stephen Miller, an architect of the Trump Administration’s “zero tolerance” family separation and other signature policies, publicly chastised his nephew for overlooking his own family’s refugee and immigrant heritage. Glosser called the Muslim ban policy—which “specifically disadvantages people based on their ethnicity, country of origin and religion”—as “a threat to all of us.”Footnote 126

Christian nationalism explains, in part, why Trump has become in some circles a figure of religious reverence, notwithstanding his attacks on Pope Francis and past evangelical supportersFootnote 127 and the distinctly unchristian aspects of his personal behavior, business practices, and public life. It also helps to explain why the administration’s nativist policies and rhetoric have received steady support from elements of the Christian press.

Faith communities need to grapple far more seriously with exclusionary mainstreamed ideologies. Robert P. Jones argues that the changing US racial and demographic composition resulting from immigration, low birth rates, and religious disaffiliation has left white Protestant Christians with a stark choice: retreat from the broader society and become an angry minority or contribute to the more pluralistic and diverse country rapidly coming into being.Footnote 128 They can work to build a better community based on shared values and ideals, or they can exaggerate—and thus exacerbate—differences and pine for the return of a mostly mythical past.

Sovereignty

The Catholic Church believes that sovereignty should be constrained by divine law, natural law, and subjective human rights.Footnote 129 Its view of sovereignty as responsibility does not immunize nations from what autocrats view as the inconveniences of international humanitarian law, human rights law, or the rule of law. By its view, sovereignty does not sanction slavery, as US slaveholding states argued in the antebellum era.Footnote 130

To the Catholic Church, “civil authority exists, not to confine its people within the boundaries” of a nation, “but rather to protect, above all else the common good of a particular civil society, which certainly cannot be divorced from the common good of the entire human family.”Footnote 131 Yet states regularly neglect to meet their sovereign obligations, as evidenced by forced displacement, the life-threatening journeys of irregular migrants, and denying refugees access to secure, permanent homes.

The Hebrew Bible highlights God’s sovereignty over the land and the human family (Exodus 23:10–12; Leviticus 25: 2–11). Exclusionary nationalists invoke sovereignty—appropriating its previously religious and “God-like characteristics”Footnote 132—to support the state’s unqualified authority over persons seeking to enter, non-citizen residents, and even disfavored citizens. Because claims based on sovereignty have proliferated in an era of diminished state power due to globalization, they seem less a sign of strength, than of “its erosion.”Footnote 133

Still the misuse of this concept traps migrants in a kind of pincer movement, between unlivable conditions in their home states and non-acceptance in others. Traditionally, refugees could access only three durable solutions: local integration, safe and voluntary return, and third-country resettlement. The availability of these options has not nearly kept pace with the need. As a result, over three-fourths of the world’s refugees and internally displaced persons, at any one time, are in situations of protracted, often intergenerational displacement.Footnote 134 Sovereignty, in this sense, has also contributed to the absurdity of a system of international law that affords migrants the right to leave their own nations and to seek asylum, but not to enter other nations.

Faith-based organizations themselves need to remain vigilant in their language and cognizant of their deeply rooted assumptions. In 2023, the Center for Migration Studies of New York published a special issue of its Journal on Migration and Human Security devoted to protracted displacement. An author of one of the articles in the special issue corrected me (a co-editor) for referring to voluntary repatriation as a “durable solution.” She said refugees have a right to return to their homes, and I should not speak about this right as a potential solution that states can ignore. From a Christian perspective, she was correct. States exist to safeguard rights, not to withhold or apportion rights as it suits their interests.

Migration challenges traditional notions of sovereignty, which speak to the authority of nations to constitute themselves and to conduct their own affairs without intervention or untoward interference from other states. Migration challenges states to safeguard the rights of their citizens (at home and abroad) and of non-citizens within their territories. It highlights the need to reconceptualize sovereignty and citizenship in an increasingly interconnected worldFootnote 135 whose most pressing challenges, such as refugee flows and climate change, require cross-border cooperation. In Dr. King’s words, it points to human beings’ “inescapable network of mutuality, tied into a single garment of destiny.”Footnote 136

Nativism

Nativism can emerge in any community, but it poses a greater risk to communities that are experiencing increased rates of immigration,Footnote 137coupled with decline of the native population.Footnote 138 Roughly one-half of the world’s population live in countries with birth rates below the replacement rate of 2.1 children per woman.Footnote 139 Ageing nations and localities in the Global North need more working-age immigrants and their young families, but this need does not translate into higher immigration rates, in part because their members may also feel displaced by immigrants and disinclined to accept them.Footnote 140

Nativist groups, in turn, stoke the fear, resentment, and even sorrow of longstanding residents at the passing of their remembered communities. Nativism is an ideological cousin of exclusionary nationalism because it asserts a state interest (a raison d’etat)Footnote 141 for the exclusion and marginalization of migrants: They threaten the state’s culture, safety, health, wealth, identity, or survival. In a classic self-fulfilling prophecy, nativists argue that certain immigrants should not be allowed to integrate because they lack the intelligence, loyalty, or requisite cultural attributes. Racists used the same argument to uphold segregation in the United States.Footnote 142 Yet research shows the opposite. Large swaths of the US immigrant population, including recipients of DACA, integrate by many metrics, even those without status.Footnote 143 And, if allowed to advance in status, they contribute far more to their communities.

Nativist rhetoric and tactics do not change much by era or geography. Nativists refer to migrants as vermin, filth, excrement, and sub-human.Footnote 144 In an act of political misdirection, they attribute the crimes of individuals to all undocumented persons, or other disfavored group. Following the death of University of Iowa student Mollie Tibbetts, her family denounced what they viewed as the “racist, false narrative” that attributed her murder to an “illegal alien,” averring that “evil” is not limited to a particular group.Footnote 145 Rabbi Felicia Sol, B’Nai Jeshurun, has pointed out that identity is always multilayered, and broadly encompasses membership in a nation, humanity, and God’s world.Footnote 146 Nativists instead essentialize one characteristic of “outsiders” (lack of status, race, or religion), and try to reduce group members to this trait,Footnote 147which they freight with negative associations.

The Great Replacement conspiracy theory, championed by public figures such as Steven Miller, Steve Bannon, and Tucker Carlson,Footnote 148 treats immigrants as both actors and tools in a larger plot—concocted by so-called elites (a flexible code word)—to replace white natives with non-whites through immigration, integration, and interracial marriage.Footnote 149 Victor Orbán, prime minister of Hungary, opposes international migration and the “mixing” of European and non-European races, claiming that states in which “mixing” occurs are “no longer nations.”Footnote 150 Yet unlike ethnicity or genetic ancestry,Footnote 151 race is a social construct. It can be useful as “a political and social” variable in research, such as studies about racism itself,Footnote 152 but not as a biological marker. Despite their irrationality, racist conspiracy theories enjoy wide support and regularly lead to violence against members of targeted groups,Footnote 153 often in defense of so-called Christian culture. Precursors and versions of this theory, dating to the nineteenth century, have bolstered white supremacist, racist, anti-Semitic, and xenophobic ideologies.Footnote 154

Racists, nativists, and nationalists also invoke biblical passages to justify war, racism, ethnic cleansing, slavery, apartheid, walls, and unquestioning obedience to authorities. Faith communities understand the dynamics and biblical roots of scapegoating (Leviticus 16: 20–34) and the age-old strategy of seeking to preserve political might, standing, and wealth by defining an out-group of potential enemies and threats to the status quo (Exodus 1: 7–14).

Negative associations of “outsiders with difference and danger are as old as human community itself.”Footnote 155 Yet such rhetoric can endanger, deeply wound, and shrink the prospects of migrants. The Center for Migration Studies of New York organized a listening session for UN officials and refugees to inform the process leading to the New York Declaration for Refugees and Migrants,Footnote 156 which in turn led to the Global Compact on RefugeesFootnote 157 and the Global Compact for Safe, Orderly and Regular Migration.Footnote 158 During this event, the refugees implored UN officials to help educate states, policy makers, and the media on their intentions. They wanted it known that they were not criminals or terrorists, but their victims. They simply wanted to live in safety and make better lives for themselves and their families. They wanted to contribute to their new communities.

Nativists also treat persons fleeing for their lives as the source—rather than survivors—of crises, and view asylum and refugee protection as enforcement loopholes. They conflate persons in flight from terror with terrorists and criminals, and characterize migrants as infiltrators and invading hordes. They use terms like refugee crisis or border crisis to misdirect the blame for forcible displacement to its victims while leaving unaddressed the real crises that uproot so many human beings, drive them to hostile borders, and deny them a secure and permanent home.

The Rule of Law

Nativists often confuse the rule of law—an ancient check on tyranny that speaks to the need to subject rulers to the law—with rule by law, a rubber stamp for government action, however deplorable. Vladimir Putin invokes Russia’s sovereignty and makes specious legal arguments in support of his war against Ukraine.Footnote 159 The Romans crucified Jesus under the color of law. Countless other rulers—genocidaires, flagrant rights abusers, and kleptocrats—have cited the law to justify their transgressions, while grossly dishonoring the rule of law.

Migrants mostly understand—from family, community members, social media, press reports, and smugglers—the risks of irregular migration. They would far prefer and will often wait for the possibility (however slim) of a safe and legal way to migrate, but they cannot wait forever. Forced displacement and irregular migration more often than not result from, rather than contribute to a breakdown in the rule of law. Nor do politically driven claims that migrants threaten law and order square with the lives of persons who have suffered the trauma, disorder, and lawlessness of uprooting, flight, and protracted displacement.

The International Organization for Migration’s Missing Migrants Project has documented the cases of 61,405 migrants who have died or gone missing since 2014.Footnote 160 These figures do not include persons forced to flee within their own countries, deaths or disappearances following deportation, or deaths in detention facilities, such as the thirty-eight men who perished in a fire in a Ciudad Juarez detention center the evening of March 27, 2023.Footnote 161

Political Symbolism: The Problem of Walls

Pope Francis has consistently spoken of the need to build bridges between peoples, not walls.Footnote 162 Faith communities devote significant time and energy to fighting harmful, mostly symbolic proposals, such as the supposedly impregnable 2,000-mile border wall championed by Trump and other 2024 presidential candidates. Walls can divert migrants to perilous crossing routes, force them into territory controlled by cartels and paramilitary groups, and cause severe injuries for migrants who fall while attempting to scale them. However, they cannot stop the flight of desperate persons.

Governor Abbott initiated Operation Lone Star in March 2021 and deployed the Texas National Guard and Texas Department of Public Safety to the border. In June of 2023, Abbott announced that the state’s multi-billion immigration enforcement budget would fund the deployment of a chain of buoys, with underwater webbing, to deter migrants from crossing the Rio Grande River.Footnote 163 The state also laid miles of concertina wire along the river. State officials implausibly claimed that this system would save lives by preventing crossing attempts. Instead, it entangled and cut exhausted migrants, including children and a pregnant woman who suffered a miscarriage.Footnote 164 In January 2024, the Texas National Guard blocked Border Patrol agents from assisting Mexican officials in rescuing migrants from a stretch of the Rio Grande where a woman and two children had drowned an hour before.Footnote 165 To legal scholars, Texas’ standoff with federal authorities and its denial of access to land where the federal government had jurisdiction to operate harkened back to segregationist tactics of an earlier era.Footnote 166

For many years, nearly twice as many newly undocumented persons entered the United States legally and overstayed temporary visas as crossed its land borders.Footnote 167 Whether or not this trend continues, walls, concertina wire, and buoys do nothing to stop these legal entries. Nor have walls succeeded in stopping illegal entries. Migrants consistently breach fencing on the Mexico-US border.Footnote 168 Nonetheless, walls have become a political rallying cry and have spread like wildfire throughout the world. Seventy-four walls, most of recent provenance, exist worldwide, with another fifteen at different stages of planning.Footnote 169

Catholic and other faith-based organizations support enforcement of immigration laws and screening of those seeking to enter the country. However, they believe that enforcement can only be effective if coupled with meaningful strategies to address the conditions that have uprooted so many human beings and sufficient legal pathways to migrate. Developed states rely overwhelmingly on migrant control and enforcement policies.

The Trump administration also sought to reduce and impede legal migration, to eviscerate humanitarian programs, and to strip certain groups of temporary residents of legal status.Footnote 170 Beyond its rhetoric on the need for a 2,000-mile wall, it embraced the symbolic standard for “operational control” of US land and maritime borders set forth in the Secure Fence Act of 2006;Footnote 171 that is, “the prevention of all unlawful entries into the United States, including entries by terrorists, other unlawful aliens, instruments of terrorism, narcotics, and other contraband.”Footnote 172 This zero-tolerance standard is far stricter than the arrest and prosecution rate in cases of murder and rape.

Impossible to meet in practice, “operational control” served two political ends. First, it associated displaced persons with terrorists and violent criminals. Second, it impeded the passage of meaningful immigration reform legislation—legislation with the potential to reduce illegal migration and increase human security—by conditioning congressional support for reform on meeting this standard. The Border Patrol has adopted more practical metrics.Footnote 173

Bad Laws and Bad Faith Compliance with Good Laws

Faith communities try to help migrants realize their fundamental human needs, such as family unity, work, education, health, security, and belonging. Yet their work and preoccupations are invariably local. Laws, policies, and systems that prevent them from assisting migrants, whether explicitly or in practice, represent one of their greatest sources of frustration.

The core legal documents in the field of refugee protection are the 1951 Refugee Convention and its 1967 Protocol. The essential protection rooted in Article 33(a) of the 1951 Refugee Convention, is non-refoulement, which prohibits contracting states from expelling or returning a “refugee in any manner whatsoever to the frontiers of territories where his life or freedom would be threatened on account of his race, religion, nationality, membership of a particular social group or political opinion.”Footnote 174 This language does not cover a large percentage of those who would be at grave risk if returned. However, the 1951 Refugee Convention commits states to protect and integrate those who do qualify.

The European Union, Australia, the United States, and other developed states have flaunted the spirt and letter of non-refoulement by denying access to their territories through interdiction by sea, interception by land, and border control strategies. To do so, they have enlisted other states, supranational entities, and private actors.Footnote 175 The legal scholar David Martin has argued that in the post-World War II era, states adopted large numbers of human rights “resolutions, recommendations, declarations, conclusions, or accords” precisely because they had no intention of honoring them.Footnote 176 While often rationalized as humanitarian, life-saving, and anti-trafficking measures, developed states implemented policies to deny desperate persons access to protection, including Jewish refugees in 1930s and 1940s, and exposed them to all manner of human rights violations.Footnote 177

The history of the US Refugee Act of 1980 represents a case in point. It sought to bring the United States into conformity with the 1951 Refugee Convention and established the current US refugee resettlement program. It also provided for a system to permit foreign-born persons “physically present in the United States or at a land border or port of entry, irrespective of such alien’s status, to apply for asylum” (emphasis added).Footnote 178 Yet shortly after its passage, Western European nations and the United States began to ramp up policies “designed to discourage asylum seeking and to contain asylum seekers in territories proximate to their home countries.”Footnote 179

In 1993, the US Supreme Court issued its unanimous decision in Sale v. Haitian Centers Council, Inc,Footnote 180 which held that non-refoulement did not apply unless a person had reached the frontiers of a signatory state. The United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees sharply criticized this decision based on its reading of the 1951 Refugee Convention’s prohibition of expulsion or return.

The Sale decision paved the way for interception and interdiction policies throughout the world that have denied countless persons the very possibility of protection, or even screening to assess whether they potentially face “persecution or torture.”Footnote 181 These developments have also tragically relieved pressure on developed states to engage fully in stemming the conditions spurring flight. Sale has been a dark cloud for countless migrants and a generation of migrant rights and service agencies, including faith-based organizations.

After Hurricane Mitch in 1998,Footnote 182 the United States pressured and assisted Mexico and Guatemala to turn back displaced persons seeking haven in the United States.Footnote 183 It resorted to these policies again—often referred to as “pushing the border out” or “border externalization”—after the terrorist attacks on the United States of September 11, 2001.Footnote 184

Tactics in the early years of the Trump administration, which faith-based organizations overwhelmingly opposed, included

  • preventing asylum-seekers from entering US territory at ports of entry and subsequently requiring them to enter at ports of entry, even in areas controlled by cartels;

  • limiting the admission of asylum-seekers to only a small number every day, and not at every port of entry, under the metering program;

  • terminating the Central American Minors program, which allowed at risk youth from El Salvador, Guatemala, and Honduras with legally present US parents to enter the United States as refugees or humanitarian parolees;

  • adopting so-called zero-tolerance policies, which nationalized the practice of separating parents from their children as a deterrent to the migration of others and which permanently severed parent-child bonds in hundreds of cases;

  • pursuing asylum cooperative agreements, allowing the United States to return select US asylum-seekers to El Salvador, Guatemala, and Honduras—three refugee-producing countries—for determination of their claims;

  • enacting the egregiously misnamed Migrant Protection Protocols that forced US asylum-seekers to await their hearings in dangerous Mexican border cities where they lived in squalid conditions, and suffered hundreds of documented cases and many more undocumented cases of murder, rape, kidnapping, assault, and extortion;Footnote 185 and

  • using the Title 42 public health law that had resulted in 2.8 million expulsions (without hearings) by May 11, 2023, when the program ended.Footnote 186

Between 1980 and 2023, the US refugee admissions program resettled more than 3.2 million refugees for an annual average of nearly 73,000.Footnote 187 Faith-based organizations resettled the overwhelming majority. However, from 2018 through 2021, the United States admitted fewer than 76,000 refugees in total. In addition, the Trump administration eviscerated the program’s public-private infrastructure, including networks of faith-based resettlement agencies built over decades.Footnote 188

The Biden administration has extended humanitarian parole to hundreds of thousands of Afghans, Ukrainians, Venezuelans, Cubans, Haitians, Nicaraguans, Central American minors, and othersFootnote 189 and Temporary Protected Status to more than 610,000 US residents from sixteen countries as of December 2023.Footnote 190 However, neither of these statutes provide a designated path to permanent residence, and temporary protected does not confer integration services. Faith communities have urged Congress to pass legislation that allows parolees to adjust to permanent residence. In addition, they advocate for the admission of refugees referred to the US resettlement program who have had been waiting for years in dangerous, untenable conditions.

Faith communities harshly criticized many of the Biden administration’s border enforcement, refugee, and legal immigration policies, particularly asylum restrictions and deterrence policies. Faith-based organizations have urged the Biden administration to create a program to stabilize and offer basic services and work authorization to the hundreds of thousands of asylum-seekers and parolees who entered the country in the early 2020s. They argue that states and localities—both on the border and in the interior of the country—cannot assume this responsibility without greater federal leadership and support.

In March 2024, the DeSantis administration announced that Florida would deploy “250 additional officers and soldiers and over a dozen air and sea craft” to its southern coast in order to “protect” the state and US “sovereign territory” from “illegal aliens coming to Florida.”Footnote 191 In April 2024, Archbishop Wenski criticized Governor DeSantis for speaking of Haitians as if they were an “invasive species,” and the Biden administration for its “unconscionable” decision to resume deportations to Haiti, a nation in “freefall.”Footnote 192

Religious Identity and the Challenge of Partnerships and Funding

Too little funding and too much need represent a core struggle for immigrant-serving faith-based organizations. Faith-based organizations serve persons based on their needs, not their religion or legal status. Yet they struggle with the issue of how to sustain their religious identity in a field that has become increasingly “secularized.”Footnote 193

Some faith-based organizations receive mostly government funding for their work with refugees and immigrants, and others depend heavily on the support of private foundations. Moreover, (secular) international and supranational entities, such as UNHCR, International Organization for Migration, the European Union, and large international nongovernmental organizations play an oversized role in this field. In 2013, UNHCR and a coalition of faith-based organizations agreed on three core principles to guide UNHCR’s partnerships with “faith actors”:

  1. 1. Hospitality in the form of humanitarian assistance and an acknowledgment of the importance of faith communities as first responders in humanitarian crises “by virtue of their presence, local knowledge, networks and assets in some of the most isolated and remote areas.”

  2. 2. Respect for “the diversity of identities, values and traditions … of forcibly displaced individuals and communities,” and a recognition that faith can be a “‘basic’ need’” and “spiritual sustenance” an imperative.

  3. 3. Equality based on shared objectives and mutual respect, and a commitment to “equal treatment and the right to equal protection according to humanitarian standards.”Footnote 194

These guidelines prioritize humanitarian assistance, lift up the extensive contributions of faith-based organizations, and recognize the spiritual needs of migrants. They seek to allow faith-based organizations to connect with migrants where and how they find them.

The work of faith-based organizations largely aligns with the objectives of their public and private funders. While faith-based organizations can influence funder priorities, funding dynamics present a quandary for them. Many spend extraordinary amounts of time cultivating funders, educating them on the needs of migrants, applying for support, and reporting on their activities. Some seek funding for projects that they would not otherwise undertake in order to keep their organizations afloat, support other work, or cement relations with funders. Faith-based organizations and other nonprofits have become adept at shoehorning their own work into the social analyses, evolving strategic assessments, and preferred language of funders. In addition, some secular funders are loathe to support faith-based organizations for fear they will proselytize or neglect to provide services that may be in tension with their religious convictions.

Conversely, faith-based organizations need to guard against compromising their values and becoming less than, in Pope Francis’s words, “completely mission-oriented.”Footnote 195 The challenge goes beyond mission drift, to the very identity of faith-based organizations and the needs of the communities they serve. Many refugees view their journeys and suffering in religious terms, and find inspiration, sustenance, and support in their faith.Footnote 196 Yet according to one report, many faith-based organizations “have become nearly indistinguishable from their secular counterparts … and have muted religious insights from their programming choices and omitted religious language from reports.”Footnote 197 One study of US resettlement agencies found paradoxically that faith-based organizations relied on their religion as “motivation and rationale” for their “almost completely secular” services, while secular mutual assistance agencies sought to build community by engaging in more religious activities and encouraging religious practice.Footnote 198

The international community, states, international nongovernmental organizations, private foundations, and countless migrants cannot achieve their aims without the active engagement of faith-based organizations. Faith-based organizations bring great expertise to this work and adhere to high humanitarian standards. However, they need the flexibility to be themselves.

Consolation

Saint Ignatius of Loyola used the word consolation to signify “when some interior movement in the soul is caused, through which the soul comes to be inflamed with love of its Creator and Lord.”Footnote 199 Thus, a state of consolation is one of “moving toward God’s active presence in the world.”Footnote 200 Consolation offers a pathway to conversion; that is, the transformation of “core beliefs, values, and priorities” in response to God’s call.Footnote 201 It can be seen as an overarching goal for members of faith communities, who hope their lives serve as a witness to God’s presence and a sign of fidelity to God’s commission.Footnote 202 Below, I offer eight overlapping ways that migrants and Christian communities experience consolation.

First, many migrants and faith communities view their journeys as part of a broader plan, not of their own making. Ministers and theologians have long mined the spiritual insights of displaced and disinherited persons. Reverend Craig Mousin highlights “the paradox of the biblical narrative: it is not those in the walled-off kingdoms that know best the grace and security of God, but it is … the poorest of the poor, the ones without rights or recognition by the state.”Footnote 203 To recover their agency and pursue their calling, some migrants need to overcome instilled feelings of unworthiness through a process leading to what the theologian Father Daniel G. Groody calls a “rehabilitated heart.”Footnote 204

Judging from monographs given to me and from many presentations at events, migrants seem to have produced a substantial, informal body of work articulating their hopes and understanding of their journeys. This work contains the wisdom of uprooted persons, stripped of physical and material security, and tapping a deeper kind of security. As Dr. King wrote of Black Americans in an essay published posthumously, so, too, do many international migrants find strength in their faith, and although they may not fully understand God’s plan for them, they do not believe that God intends their failure either.Footnote 205

Faith-based organizations believe that human beings become themselves in solidarity with others and in service to the common good. They take consolation in work they believe God calls them to do, however wrenching and traumatic. They share stories such as that of a young humanitarian working with refugees, who wondered why God did nothing to stop the suffering she witnessed day after day. The answer came to her that night: “I created you.” Saint Teresa of Avila expressed this insight succinctly: “Christ has no body but yours.”Footnote 206

Second, many migrants remain grateful, faithful, and hopeful in spite of their struggles. In a 2013 interview, Father Pat Murphy, who administers Casa del Migrante in Tijuana, said: “One of my favorite things to do at night is look and see how new immigrants come and kneel in front of (the statue of) Our Lady of Guadalupe. If after all they’ve suffered, they’re still able to give thanks to God, it inspires me to do the same in my daily life.”Footnote 207

This sense of gratitude also wells up in the children of immigrants. In a 2023 high school assembly in Washington, DC, graduating seniors were asked to thank one person who had helped them on their journeys. A young woman haltingly thanked her father for his devotion to her and her sister. Her father had migrated from Eritrea, putting himself through college, graduate school, and finally a doctoral program in the United States. “Who does that?” she asked. “And how is it that the person who arrived in this country with only $20 in his pocket turns out to be my father?”

The US Religion Census for 2020 reported that the number of adherents in religious congregations—members, children, and non-member attendees—had grown between 2010 and 2020, but the percentage of adherents as a proportion of the US population remained about the same (48.8 percent to 48.6 percent), with variations by state and religious affiliation.Footnote 208 The data revealed immigration as the source of traditional religious clusters in the United States and, in recent decades, of increased religious pluralism and the “diversification” and “de-Europeanization” of Christianity, which still accounts for the “largest share” of US immigrants.Footnote 209 The multicultural Catholic parishes located primarily in the southern and western United States have on average more parishioners and celebrate far more baptisms, first communions, confirmations, and marriages than do any other type of Catholic parish.Footnote 210 Yet Catholics remain sadly divided on migration or, put differently, about migrants.

Third, faith communities try to practice hospitality in the sense of building a community that allows newcomers to exercise their agency and restores right relations between host and guest. Christian hospitality views God as the host of both natives and newcomers, destabilizing “the unbalanced order of relations” that these roles often “spawn.”Footnote 211 According to William O’Neill, SJ, hospitality is not a form of “benevolence” that sharply distinguishes between host and guest, but a duty at the “interstices of justice and rights.”Footnote 212 O’Neill, who worked for years in the Kakuma refugee camp in Kenya, writes that camps may offer a modicum of security, shelter and sustenance, but at the cost of the freedom of their residents to work, to migrate, and to participate fully in a community. As a result, camps “conspire to deny the very rights they were intended to protect.”Footnote 213

Faith-based organizations work to integrate immigrants. By integration, they do not mean tolerance or assimilation of the kind that “instantiates a power dynamic or paternalistic relationship”Footnote 214 or in which guests become dependent on the host’s largesse.Footnote 215 They mean instead integration infused by hospitality and the promise of a more loving, just, and compassionate home for all its members.

Hospitality does not suppress or denigrate the cultures of immigrants or idealize the cultures of host communities. Christianity enjoys many cultural expressions and seeks to “foster communion … that welcomes the abundant variety of gifts and charisms that the Spirit pours out.”Footnote 216 Faith communities recognize culture as the medium through which human beings express their deepest hopes and values. They believe that the encounter of persons of diverse cultures through migration has the potential to create more inclusive and life-giving communities, rooted in shared values and commitments.

The theologian Martin Buber offered a view of integration akin to the Christian vision of “unity in diversity” and communion. In Buber’s dialogical approach, the “teachers of immigrants should be immigrants themselves” and unity based on “renewed affinity to eternal values.”Footnote 217 A shared, revitalized culture requires “religious regeneration” that goes “beyond prevailing ideologies and identities.”Footnote 218 To Buber, integration does not signal a loss of “cultural distinctiveness” or absorption into “the prevailing culture.”Footnote 219 It requires not just “teaching,” but “learning.”Footnote 220

At Sacred Heart Church in McCallen, Texas, families entering the Humanitarian Respite Center in the midst of their long trials and struggles “are welcomed with joyful applause, smiles, and greetings from volunteers who shout out ‘Bienvenidos!’ Welcome! This welcome alone begins the transformation of restoring their dignity. Mothers and fathers are moved to tears from the overwhelming joy they feel from the volunteers who greet them with warmth and love.”Footnote 221 The greeting begins a journey in which hosts, in offering hospitality to migrants, ultimately become “guests” of the Kingdom of God.Footnote 222

Fourth, faith communities find consolation in working with persons in need across differences in culture, language, legal status, national origin, religion, and ethnicity.Footnote 223 Catholic organizations sometimes deflect criticism of their work with socially disfavored groups by insisting that they serve people based on their own beliefs (who we are), and not based on the characteristics of those they serve (who they are). Yet this formulation is only partially true, for it leaves out too much. Faith communities work with migrants from their belief in the importance of engaging and serving persons in need from diverse backgrounds and cultures—that is, because of who both they and we are. The encounter of culturally diverse persons is a precondition to communion, when they become us, and we become them. At its best, encounter can evoke a Pentecostal-like sense of unity, wonder, and affirmation (Acts 2:1–12, 43–44).

Pope Francis lifted up a vision of human equality and dignity in an ecumenical prayer that implores the Holy Spirit to “show us your beauty, reflected in all the peoples of the earth, so that we may discover anew that all are important and all are necessary, different faces of the one humanity that God so loves.”Footnote 224

Faith-based organizations contribute to unity in diversity by engaging systemic injustices that exclude migrants from full membership in the human family, such as racial and environmental injustice, poverty, violence, labor abuses, and divided families. To faith-based organizations, most migrants model self-sacrifice, courage, and hope for a better future. Because of these qualities, faith-based organizations view migrants as a gift and their greatest resource, and they see migration as an opportunity, not a burden.

Fifth, faith communities take pride in their commitment to the flourishing of “each” person and the “whole” person.Footnote 225 To promote the full development of migrants, faith-based organizations must respond to their interrelated needs—legal, linguistic, cultural, socioeconomic, and spiritual—and the intersecting elements of their identities. The Catholic Church in the United States provides immigrants with a spiritual home and a range of services through its extensive legal, refugee resettlement, charitable, educational, health care, and community organizing networks. Catholic parishes offer many of the same services, including new programs established in response to the COVID-19 pandemic and to racial injustice.Footnote 226

Sixth, faith communities find consolation in performing the complementary work of charity (love of neighbor or what some call immediate love) and justice (establishing right relationships or longer-term love). To paraphrase Dorothy Day, this work serves as a constant reminder that individual people matter more than do abstract ideologies. The US refugee resettlement program has been an example of charity and justice. Refugees have played a crucial role in this work, and are at the forefront of efforts to strengthen and generate broader support for it.Footnote 227 In addition, for thirty-eight years, faith-based organizations have partnered with other US immigrant-serving institutions to administer what has effectively been the nation’s only major legalization program. They have helped legalize millions of immigrants, case by case.Footnote 228 While they have strongly advocated for legislative reform, they have not waited for Congress to act.

Faith communities work both to prevent crises and to mitigate their effects, particularly for at risk populations. They understand, for example, women’s and girls’ “tenuous hold on safety, health, education, and opportunity in their communities” of origin, which is “amplified in the chaos of crisis,” forced migration, and settlement in their new communities.Footnote 229

Mostly, faith-based organizations serve migrants in their need. They work to change the underlying conditions in refugee-producing countries. However, they do not enjoy the luxury of waiting for conditions to improve to the point that potential migrants would be free to stay or forced migrants could return home. Instead, they assist desperate migrants as they encounter them, while they advocate for more permanent, viable solutions for them. In a 2006 interview, the theologian James H. Cone called the immigration movement “a re-living of the civil rights movement” and “deepening the meaning of the civil rights movement itself.”Footnote 230 Faith-based organizations count themselves fortunate to be part of a larger struggle for human and civil rights.

Seventh, faith communities view migration from the perspective of the needs, aspirations, rights, and gifts of the affected human beings.Footnote 231This recognition shapes their programs and ministries. Pope Benedict XVI insisted, “[t]he human person must always be the focal point in the field of international migration.”Footnote 232 Many scholars conduct research, rooted in the struggles and aspirations of migrants. Migrant-centered research draws on the expertise, direction, and participation of members of migrant communities. It assists migrants to identify, take action, and advocate for their own needs.Footnote 233 Migrant-led community organizing operates in a similar way. The Pastoral Migratoria parish-based organizing model, for example, trains immigrant leaders to identify the needs of their communities and to develop (mostly) self-help strategies to address them.Footnote 234

Eighth, Christian communities work to change minds and hearts. They seek to convert established members of communities who oppose their work while remaining open to their own need for conversion. For migrants, conversion can mean restoring a sense of their dignity and worth in the face of negative rhetoric, public policies, and experiences that have led some to internalize a sacrilegious view of themselves. For members of host communities, conversion can take place through encounter with immigrants and deeper engagement with their own faith traditions. At an event of the Catholic Immigrant Integration Initiative in 2022,Footnote 235 the director of the Kino Border Initiative lamented the lack of attention paid by faith-based organizations to the formation of persons with different political views. Denouncing opponents as a lost cause or seeking to disabuse them of their policy misconceptions is not a faith-based strategy, but a recipe for losing them from the start.

The Jewish “people” sought the salvation of a people, a nation, and a “community of nations,” and early Christians viewed life in communal terms, as a matter of building the body of Christ.Footnote 236 In Christ’s judgment day parable, God will assemble “all the nations” and judge them by what they did for the “least” (Matthew 25:31–46, at 32, 40, NABRE). There will be no schadenfreude when time runs out on the goats in this parable and they are banished from God’s presence. It will be an individual and collective tragedy.

Today changing hearts and minds also requires faith communities to revert to first principles and explain why states should protect refugees, preserve families, and expand permanent solutions for displaced persons. Faith-based organizations need to belabor what may seem obvious to them without frustration or condescension. When it comes to public education, the repetition of facts, strong analysis, and good ideas are often more important than scholarship that breaks new theoretical ground. As it stands, facts and evidence are often lost in the noise of political messaging, and truth is too often a contested idea, and not viewed as a liberating force.

A Sending: Encounter, Persistence, and Our Common Humanity

Pope Francis coined the phrase “the globalization of indifference” to characterize the world’s response to forced migrants.Footnote 237 The Holy Father’s antidote to indifference is to go to the peripheries and encounter immigrants, refugees, and the very poor, whether in one’s own communities or elsewhere.Footnote 238

Encounter humanizes what are too often treated as issues. There is great power in listening to a refugee, an unaccompanied minor, or a young person without legal status share their experiences, aspirations, and hopes. In a 2021 interview, Sister Norma Pimentel of Catholic Charities of the Rio Grande Valley said: “I always encourage everyone to come down and see for themselves … [this] should not be about politics. It needs to be about people, because that’s what we’re seeing here at the border.”Footnote 239

Encounter also illuminates a paradox of great salience to Christian communities. Forced migrants must often subject themselves to the perils of irregular migration, which include criminal predation and apprehension by legal authorities. Each year, thousands die in transit and many more become stranded or even enslaved before reaching their intended destinations.Footnote 240 However, while most residents in developed states do not need to travel to subsist or survive, they can do so legally and safely. This state of affairs points to systemic injustice and a disordered world.

Christians can draw on a rich tradition of teaching and spiritual insights, as they negotiate the trials and consolations of their work with migrants. Faith communities serve millions of migrants, refugees, and immigrants each day. They have achieved notable operational and policy successes. Yet they take on this work—just as might an emergency room doctor or nurse—recognizing that the needs will not go away, some lives will have tragic endings, and even major victories will not be decisive. They do the best they can, knowing that ultimately the world is not in their hands.

Dorothy Day spoke to both the privilege of being able to work with the poor and the limits of our own individual efforts. “Why should we try to see results?” she wrote to a despairing friend. “It is enough to keep on in the face of what looks to be defeat … After all, we can only do what lies in our power and leave the rest to God, and God will attend to it.”Footnote 241

Christian communities witness inhumanity, but can also take consolation in work that provides witness to a common humanity. The Rwandan genocide survivor Felicien Ntagengwa gave poignant testimony to this reality. “If you knew me, and if you really knew yourself, you would not have killed me.”Footnote 242 Thomas Merton, who described himself as a “marginal,” “status-less person,” spoke of the need for communion, which he called an “older unity” and a kind of communication “beyond words.”Footnote 243 “My brothers and sisters,” he famously said, “we are already one. But we imagine that we are not. And what we have to recover is our original unity. What we have to be is what we are.”Footnote 244

Acknowledgments and Citation Guide

I thank Silas W. Allard, Bishop Nicholas DiMarzio, and Edward Kissam for their thoughtful comments and careful review of an early version of this article. I also thank the Rev. Craig Mousin, former DePaul University ombudsperson and a leading advocate, scholar, and institution builder in the immigrant justice field, for inviting me to participate in the inaugural event for the DePaul Migration Collaborative, which prompted an earlier version of this article. The author has no competing interests to declare. This article is cited according to the Chicago Manual of Style, 17th edition.

References

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